AI should be able to give similar answers to questions about any privacy law, right?
https://pogowasright.org/new-jersey-division-of-consumer-affairs-publishes-privacy-law-faqs/
New Jersey Division of Consumer Affairs Publishes Privacy Law FAQs
Hunton Andrews Kurth points us to a resource on New Jersey data privacy law:
On January 6, 2025, the New Jersey Division of Consumer Affairs Cyber Fraud Unit published a set of frequently asked questions and answers (“FAQs”) on the New Jersey Data Privacy Law (“NJDPL”). The FAQs are intended for the convenience of business that may be subject to the law and cover topics such as “What is ‘personal data’?” and “What rights does the NJDPL protect?”. The FAQs reiterate that small businesses and non-profits are subject to the NJDPL if they meet the law’s applicability thresholds. The FAQs also state that the Division of Consumer Affairs will issue regulations in 2025. The NJDPL becomes effective January 15, 2025.
Is this a strength or a weakness?
https://techxplore.com/news/2025-01-key-ai-power-inbuilt-special.html#google_vignette
Researchers find the key to AI's learning power—an inbuilt, special kind of Occam's razor
A study from Oxford University has uncovered why the deep neural networks (DNNs) that power modern artificial intelligence are so effective at learning from data.
The findings demonstrate that DNNs have an inbuilt "Occam's razor," meaning that when presented with multiple solutions that fit training data, they tend to favor those that are simpler. What is special about this version of Occam's razor is that the bias exactly cancels the exponential growth of the number of possible solutions with complexity.
The Paper: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-024-54813-x
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